Paul Rand

Paul Rand, was a leading figure in graphic design who made innovative visual identities for some of America’s major corporations and book and magazine publishers

We all have seen the designs of Paul Rand at some stage of our lives. He had a career spanning nearly seven decades. There is the seminal logo for IBM and the logo for ABC. There is the Westinghouse logo, the logo for NeXT computers. There are posters and packaging, book covers, record covers and a multitude of magazine covers.

Rand was said to hate academia, but he was an influential professor at Yale University since 1956.

To design he writes, “is much more than to simply to assemble, to order, or even to edit: it is to add value and meaning, to illuminate to simplify, to clarify, to modify, to dignify to dramatise, to persuade and perhaps even amuse. To design is to transform prose into poetry.”(from Principles of User Interface Design)

Early Work

Rand had a prolific graphic design portfolio, and it spanned more than a half a century. His work symbolised the modernist design ethic of the postwar era. In the 1930’s when American commercial art and advertising was dominated by in your face copy and realistic illustrations. Rand introduced the avant-garde art movements to visual communication and publishing. His advertisements in the 1930’s, 40’s and 50’s for such clients as Orbach’s department store, Disney Hats, Schenley Liquors, Playtex and El Producto Cigars as well as-as hundreds of book jackets and covers for Alfred A. Knof and other publishers, combined formal elements from modern painting with geometric purity of typography.

Corporate branding

He had the ability to combine art and design and still distil the essence of a company or a product and discover the essence of a brand. A talent gave a brand an instantly recognisable identity to consumers. They were imbued with a distinctive wit and logic yet entirely devoid of personal indulgences.

His notion of visual identity placed the viewer in a more active role. The viewer’s curiosity stimulated the viewer himself must complete the meaning of the message.

Rand says that the stripes for the IBM logo came from a desire to soften the bluntness of the three letter logo, first introduced in 1956. His inspiration, he says, was striped background often used in legal documents at the time to prevent forgeries.

Stripes are, of course, a nearly universal design motif, but the IBM stripes have taken on a particular meaning. Although Rand did not associate them with wiring or communication others did. Striped graphic became an understated, unintimidating signal of high technology. And stripes of a particular width and rhythm, even without the letters communicate the message “IBM”.

Photography and Montage

He used photography and montage, cut paper and asymmetrical typography. He did not avoid complexity. However, his ideas were often, “distilled to their most salient form.”

No Way Out film poster – Designed by Paul Rand

His poster design for the film, “No Way Out” was a nod to the 1950’s style cubist works. He was one of the few American designers to follow the modernist traditions of Cubism and the Bauhaus and was influential in working with the New Typography. He moved away from the thought of the sentimental type and layout treatment of the 1930’s.

Rand was of the opinion that good design does not date, but the bad design does.

El Producto Cigars – Fathers Day 1960

Rand often signed his design work. The reason he always insisted on signing his work was that he did not want to be subordinate to anyone.

El Producto Cigars – Packaging Fathers Day 1960

The El Producto line of cigars was a classic example of his tasteful packaging. This campaign was designed for the 50th anniversary of Fathers day in 1960. They illustrate that Dad was the centre of the family, affection and attention.

Paul Rand Gin label for Schenley

The Schenley label, Rand used the arbitrary typographic elements. The label did not look too austere by the utilisation of the marbled paper for the background.

Paul Rand despite the commercial pressures, and the ebbs and flows of the field he was able to transform it for thousands of designers. He never faltered, never changed, never questioned the rightness of his mission. He more than any designer gave the design industry a credibility as an essential tool for communication.

Simon is a Sydney based digital designer. He is the Director of a boutique digital design studio, Bailey Street Design located in the vibrant inner west suburb of Newtown. Simon studied graphic design at Shillington College and specialises in web design for small and medium-sized businesses. Simon and his team (Toby the studio dog) are passionate about visual communication in the digital environment.